popliar: shaun tan (Default)
DPR Arctic was up first with a big light show and a real club atmosphere. Sitting down was probably not the ideal way to experience this but I did find his 20-25 minute set quite entertaining.

This was especially in contrast to DPR Cream, who had a similar length set, which I just could not get into. His songs are just too repetitive to really land for me.

Finally, the main event - DPR Ian, hometown boy. It's really his show. He had not just the backdrop and lights but also a full band and back-up dancers, and the audience was undoubtedly there for him.

He came on stage with such flair and drama, and with newly dyed blonde hair, and as with his show in 2022 it was such a great set. His vibe for much of this show was somewhat sleazy 80s pop star, in the most positive sense, he seemed to be having such a good time. He just has charisma in buckets, and that's so evident when he performed a couple of songs in the middle of the set stripped back with no dancing, no visuals, just him - but he's equally a showman, theatrical in his approach to the concert experience. He really works hard to put on a show and it pays off. Some songs had fantastic dance solos, others dazzled with lights, the band were amazing. His dancers were cat people for Scaredy Cat! At one point he was wearing wings!

Some fun and interesting bits of crowd banter and ments:
  • His family and friends were present including his mum and some people who knew him from school. He said it was a "bit cringe" performing in front of them but also "I know you love me."
  • In the lead-in to Peanut Butter and Tears, he told a story about bringing his grandmother's kimchi fried rice to school and sometimes swapping it for sandwiches - segueway to the song - but he also said "I can finally call it a canteen here" after not being able to say this in the USA and elsewhere. For the uninitiated the canteen is the kind of cultural equivalent to the school cafeteria. Also known as a tuckshop.
  • While in Sydney he took his mum to see Jesus Christ Superstar and was so impressed at the production and the vocalists.
  • He asked the audience if they knew where he went to school. The superfan next to me (incredibly vocal and engaged the entire time lol if I didn't find it cute I would have been annoyed) yelled "WOLLONGONG" and was shook when he said he went to primary school in Lidcombe! Wollongong was later!
  • He said it was good to be back after 2 years and referenced that he'd been going through a hard time then. He said Australia gave him energy and that he was thinking of moving back here - "but what would I even do here?" I am going to take this as mere concert banter, I doubt he is moving back lol.
  • He played an excerpt from a new song called "I am Nobody" and said this song was about ego death, wanting to be nobody to himself, without ego, so he could be someone to someone else (like us, the audience). He said the next album will be centered on the identity of Ian, rather than Mito or The Hybrid.
  • Someone in the audience was holding up some kind of C-Clown reference. He said, "For those who don't know, I used to be… in the circus."
  • He did the "Aussie Aussie Aussie" chant, saying he hadn't been planning to do it as it's too cliche!
  • He talked about having meat pies and sausage rolls and how the best place to get them was the servo. Also bantered a bit about the Australian way of shortening everything and how people found it weird when he was in the USA.
  • At one point he got some fanart from the crowd and showed it up on stage, very sweet.


setlist )
popliar: shaun tan (Default)
It's been a grey summer and the evening was very rainy as we sloped down to Luna Park to see DPR Regime. Most of the audience was queuing in heavy drizzle. Miserable! But the rain did die off a bit and once we got inside things improved.

There's four artists in the Dream Perfect Regime collective but DPR Live and DPR Ian get the lion's share of the spotlight, both on tour and in general. DPR Cream and DPR REM were on the tour too but tbh I don't think they got more than a couple of songs each.

Live was up first - I was so impressed by the staging. There was an almost theatrical air to the performance with dramatic lighting that drew the eye to particular spots on the stage, use of voiceover and props, using the back of the stage to bring and reduce depth.

Some of the props were quite simple - an inflatable astronaut figure, a waving flag, dancers running around in the dark with only glimpses visible in the lights - but it was all deployed so effectively. Nothing looked super expensive, all of it would be achievable by most artists, but few put that much thought into it!

As for Live himself, I do like his songs but I think honestly he would've been better served at some outdoor festival getting the crowd hyped in the sunshine. Here, in this dark space, he was at times too obviously just a guy yelling over the top of a backing track. I can't quite get how to describe it but there was something about his performance which made me feel like, "aside from the stage effects, I could just be listening to this at home."

Live ended his set and gave way to Ian (aka Christian Yu), and here's where the show really kicked into gear for me. Everything about this stage and show seemed suited to Ian's vibes. He too used the stage to simple but fantastic effect, from the opening scene where he appeared to have giant dark wings, then later being haunted by hands and arms appearing from the back 'wall' of the stage, and also some fantastic smoke and rain effects. All of this framed his moody atmospheric brand of stardom so well and he was so magnetic as a performer - there is just that star quality about him that made the stage electric. I don't remember the setlist in any detail but I feel like he played a ton from Ballroom Extravaganza, plus tracks like No Blueberries.

ETA: Oh yeah and at one point he played electric guitar. Yeah. Yeah. It was good.

This was the first of two sold out shows for Ian in his hometown, ending their months-long worldwide tour. He told the crowd that he'd said goodbye to his mother thinking he'd just be in Korea for three months - but it ended up being ten years! "Every time I come back, I think why did I leave such a beautiful place," he said. (I think I know at least one reason why, and it's the same reason why other idols go to Korea - because as an Asian person in Australia the odds of getting ahead in a pop career here are slim to none.)

Ian seemed genuinely pleased and touched to be here, and at times he got personal - though there was an element of showmanship here too. For example he spoke about being bipolar (adding as an aside, "yeah for my high school friends who are here, I'm bipolar! I didn't find out until later") and that was quite honest and moving. But then he used it to segue into saying something cheesy and fanservicey to the crowd which I didn't mind, honestly, the man has an idol background, but it did break the illusion a bit of this being a spontaneous moment.

Towards the end of the show there were a few genuinely serious moments. Ian saw some kids in distress in the crowd and asked security to come and help them out, including once when he stopped mid-song; I think about four people at least got helped out of the crowd. He also asked security to pass out more water to the fans. From where I was in the seats the crowd looked pretty calm so I think it was probably a overheat/exhaustion/hydration thing as much as crowding? Anyway he was really calm and reassuring about it and it seemed it was handled well.

But also a couple of funny moments. At one point the crowd kept yelling "Shoey! Shoey! Shoey!" In Australian parlance this means to partake of an alcoholic beverage which has been poured into a shoe, as an act of laddish bravado. Ian just shook his head and said, "I can't hear what you're saying." Thank god lol.

Secondly he picked up an Australian flag from the crowd, and after keeping it on his person for a song or so he draped it over a mic stand for the finale when all the DPRs came out together. But Live had no idea, so he came over to the mic stand and just took the flag off and dropped it on the ground. Live turned away, Ian saw the flag had fallen, put it back on again. IAN TURNED AWAY, LIVE SAW THE FLAG, DROPPED IT AGAIN LOL oh my god.

Had a good time. Good show. When we got outside again the rain had stopped. The harbour was gorgeous. Good night.

couple of MVs )

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